RESEARCH TRIANGLE, NC, March 29, 2019 — IEM donated air stairs to the Francisco C. Ada/Saipan International Airport to replace jet bridges that were damaged by Super Typhoon Yutu in Oct. 2018.

The two sets of stairs arrived in Saipan on Nov. 12, 2018, and were immediately assembled for use. On Dec. 21, 2018, a small ceremony took place to commemorate the new stairs.

IEM and CPA personnel in front of the donated air stairs at the Francisco C. Ada/Saipan International Airport on Dec. 21, 2018.

IEM sent their Air Ops team to Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands of Saipan and Tinian in November of last year to help with the Yutu disaster response. The Air Ops team provided logistical and planning support for the tracking of supplies and relief workers arriving in Saipan and Tinian from destinations such as Guam, Hawaii, and the mainland United States. The team also provided oversight for the acquisition and delivery of the air stairs, assembled them, and provided safety training to airport staff.

In December, IEM vice president of international homeland security and emergency management Bryan Koon and IEM Air Ops manager Don Griffith visited the Air Ops team on the ground. During their stay, a ceremony was held at the airport that was attended by Koon, Griffith, representatives of the Commonwealth Ports Authority and the IEM Air Ops team.

“The damage that the airport in Saipan sustained during Super Typhoon Yutu was significant, and had the potential to cause a ripple effect within the local economy should commercial flights be suspended for too long. We wanted to help the island and the people of Saipan to move from the response to the recovery phase quickly, and restoring contributors to the economy, like tourists, plays a role in that,” stated IEM vice president of international homeland security and emergency management Bryan Koon. “We commend our community partners in Saipan and Tinian for the hard work they have put in to recovering from Yutu. It is encouraging to know that the CPA and airport personnel will be able to use these air stairs long after the island rebuilds.”

The larger of the two sets of air stairs reaches wide-body aircraft, including Boeing 747s, Boeing 767s, and Boeing 777s. The smaller set is for narrow-body aircraft such as Boeing 737s and Airbus A321s. The stairs can also be used by Boeing 747 crews to offload cargo without relying on a scissor lift. The additional air stairs allow for a combined total of three commercial passenger aircraft to operate at Saipan International Airport.

IEM became one of the first companies to focus solely on emergency management and to use quantitative data and science to inform decisions in emergency management. Over the past 35 years, IEM has grown from a company of one to an employer of over 550 employees, and has provided clients and communities with innovative solutions that produce results and save lives.

The Chemical Stockpile Emergency Preparedness Program (CSEPP) is jointly managed by FEMA and the U.S. Army. The program ensures maximum protection for the communities surrounding U.S. chemical weapons stockpile sites. Since 1993, IEM has provided program integration services to FEMA and through FEMA to the states and counties that are part of CSEPP.

In 1999, FEMA selected IEM to be the CSEPP onsite Program Management and Integration Contractor. IEM worked with program managers to develop a flexible protection framework that broke down the “maximum protection” mandate into measurable benchmarks. These benchmarks have been adopted by emergency managers in 10 states, 40 countries, and one Tribal Nation.IEM was awarded a five-year BPA with FEMA to continue working to further CSEPP initiatives between 2000 and 2004. During this time IEM was contracted to develop a secure website to facilitate communication and information-sharing among CSEPP planners nationwide who work in different jurisdictions. The website IEM created now has over 1,000 active users who use it as their primary source of CSEPP information. IEM also developed a demonstration version of an interactive computer-based “game” designed to illustrate the effects of different protective action decisions in a CSEPP emergency to citizens in the Madison County, KY, CSEPP community.

FEMA awarded IEM a second five-year BPA from 2005-2011. IEM was asked to provide CSEPP technical and analytical studies, risk assessments, support for development of programmatic guidance and preparation of reports to Congress. IEM was required to evaluate the Oregon CSEPP community’s readiness in the event of a depot incident. IEM also assisted in the planning and execution of regular readiness exercises and supported pre-exercise meetings. IEM’s work for CSEPP has been recognized on multiple levels. In 2004, FEMA and IEM received a Profiles in Innovation Award for Emergency Preparedness and Response Excellence from GOVSEC (Government Security Expo and Conference). IEM continues to work with FEMA to increase preparedness and achieve measurable results.

IEM received the National Reinventing Government Hammer Award for the Domestic Preparedness Program Team for their “contribution to building a government that works better and costs less” by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore.

The 2000 James S. Cogswell Industrial Security Award for Outstanding Industrial Security Achievement was rewarded to IEM in recognition for its “sustained outstanding achievement in implementation of the National Industrial Security Program thereby contributing significantly to the security interests of our nation.” This award is given to only 0.4% of the almost 12,000 facilities with Department of Defense security clearance.

QEM uses the information gathered from conducting different scenarios to calculate the risk and impact of implementing different risk-reducing strategies. It pinpoints the actions that are the most effective at reducing risk across a wide spectrum of potential events. QEM allows clients to know the best way to allocate funds and bridge gaps in preparedness without spending thousands of dollars to implement ideas that cannot work.

QEM’s methodology has been applied to hundreds of IEM projects, such as readiness assessments, chemical plant mitigation studies, protective action analyses, and hurricane evacuation planning. The U.S. Army and FEMA have repeatedly used QEM technology to assess strategies to protect citizens in case of an accidental release of chemical agents. DOD’s Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) also utilized QEM to quantify the effectiveness of various chemical defense systems. The software continues to provide valuable solutions to clients.